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Bailouts

New Yorkers know that Governor Cuomo’s plan to bail out old, unprofitable nuclear plants is a big mistake. If the governor gets his way, he’ll take $7.6 billion from hard working New Yorkers and hand it over to a highly profitable Chicago nuclear company. We should be investing in sustainable energy, not handing out giant subsidies for aging, unsafe nuclear plants.

You can help change the governor’s mind with a quick 30-second phone call to let his office know where you stand. It’s simple. Just follow these instructions:

Tell Governor Cuomo’s office your name and where you live, then say:“As a constituent, I oppose the Cuomo tax on New Yorkers’ utility bills and urge Governor Cuomo to stop his proposed $7.6 billion bailout of unprofitable nuclear plants. His mistaken plan would take billions of dollars out of New Yorkers’ pockets to subsidize aging, unsafe, nuclear plants owned by a highly profitable Chicago-based company. Instead, Governor Cuomo should invest in energy efficiency and truly clean renewable alternatives like solar and wind while saving consumers money.”

Belgium’s Doel reactors. The U.S. NRC doesn’t seem to care that cracking in their reactor pressure vessels may exist in U.S. reactors as well. Photo from Wikipedia.

A bit of a mishmash for this Friday, but we wanted to bring some additional attention to some news and developments you might have missed over the past couple of days (and even a bit farther back in one case).

The efforts by the nuclear power industry to obtain ratepayer bailouts to subsidize their uneconomic reactors in several states, most notably Illinois, New York and Ohio, are gaining greater and greater attention across the country. Any hope utilities like Exelon might have had that their legislative and regulatory machinations might slip under the radar is long crushed.

And today the issue hit the biggest media player covering this venue (not to mention the interests of large industrial consumers of electricity, who have not been sold on the notion of bailout out failed nuclear reactors): the Wall Street Journal. Headlined Nuclear Power Goes Begging, Likely at Consumers’ Expense, the article doesn’t really take a strong position either way on the issue–it’s pretty straightforward–but the reality that if Exelon et. al. are successful consumers will pay more for electricity that they otherwise would have to, comes across clearly.

Meanwhile, Exelon doesn’t seem embarrassed that after more than a year of complaining that its Clinton reactor in Illinois is losing money, it suddenly received quite a windfall from an early Spring electricity auction. Despite what appears to be a rapid return to profitability for Clinton, Exelon hasn’t changed its bailout request for the reactor from the Illinois legislature; it’s too greedy for that. But it may serve to help undermine Exelon’s case for rate increases, which has never been very strong to begin with.

As our guest writer Yves Marignac pointed out earlier this week, the world’s largest reactor manufacturer, France’s Areva, is in a heap of trouble over the discovery of anomalies in the construction of the pressure vessel for its Flamanville EPR reactor. It turns out that the proposed Calvert Cliffs-3 reactor in Maryland, which we defeated in NRC licensing hearings a couple years ago, had a vessel using the same flawed process. No worry that one will ever be used, however.

The choice facing Areva if further tests confirm the problem isn’t pretty for the company. As a French official said speaking of Flamanville, “Either EDF abandons the project or it takes out the vessel and starts building a new one … this would be a very heavy operation in terms of cost and delay.”

It isn’t clear, however, that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission would care much about the safety issues related to the EPR–or any other reactor. As the IEEE Spectrum, normally thought of as a pro-industry publication, reported this week, the NRC is continuing to oppose all European efforts to improve nuclear safety and regulation.

Belgian nuclear regulators recently found cracking in reactor pressure vessels in that country, and believe this cracking is due not to construction defects, as was first thought, but to routine operation. They have urged regulators across the world to conduct the same tests they have done to determine whether this may be an endemic problem for reactors. The NRC’s response: yawn.

In more hopeful news, the global Climate Action Network (CAN), the largest network of organizations working on climate change, has in the past had a rather wishy-washy position on nuclear power. No more. In March, CAN adopted a new position on nuclear, calling for no new reactors and keeping nuclear power entirely out of upcoming climate negotiations at the COP 21 conference in Paris in December. You can read it here.

By the way, we have changed the focus of our Facebook page that previously was used for organizing for the Nuclear-Free, Carbon-Free contingent to last September’s People’s Climate March in New York. Now its focus is on organizing a similar large contingent to the massive climate march planned for that COP 21 conference.

Finally, we’re about to enter the last week of our Legacy Fund Campaign–and we’ve still got not one, but two $5,000 matching challenge grants to meet!Here’s a video of NIRS board member Timothea Howard explaining the importance of this campaign. We hope you’ll take the two minutes needed to watch it.

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